Solantis Review and Website Analysis

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Solantis - logo

The platform positions itself as “a reliable, regulated broker with thousands of clients around the world” — except that the company’s domain was registered in November 2025 and paid for only one year ahead. Right out of the gate, the numbers don’t match up with the pretty statements and sweet promises. In this Solantis review, we’ll expose every inconsistency and prove why the word “fraud” is more than fitting here.

Brief Overview

  • 🖥Official Website: solantis.pro
  • ✈️Contact Address: Robin Kelton Building, Choc Bay – Castries, Saint Lucia
  • 📞Customer Support: support@solantis.pro
  • 🔐Licensing and Accreditation: –
  • ⏳Track Record: 2025
  • 🧰Specialization: brokerage service
  • 🤝Terms of Cooperation: 1:500
  • 💰Additional Services: copy-trading

Solantis.pro Examination

At first glance, the broker’s website looks expensive and respectable. A pleasant and attractive background, a well-curated color palette, and tidy icons. However, it’s just a template that we often come across with offshore companies like this one. The image of a man in a suit holding a holographic tablet jumps out at you right away — something that shows up almost every single time.

Furthermore, Solantis constantly uses pseudo-motivational and grandiose phrases, such as “Your Entry to Master The Global Financial Markets”. The entire homepage is built on promises of easy income: “100% on autopilot”, “Forget about market analysis”, “Stress-free”, and “Copy the pros and make money”.

Solantis - website

It’s also worth pointing out that the website is only available in English. Solantis screams on the homepage that it’s “trusted by thousands of traders all over the world”. Any proper international broker has its website available in a minimum of 5–10 languages. For example, Exness operates in 15+ languages, and XM in 25+.

The menu is set up “like the grown-ups do it”: Home, Trading, Company, Copy Trading, Support, Login, and Open Account buttons. There’s an “About Us” section, account types are listed, and there are plenty of legal documents in the footer — Terms of Use, Risk Disclosure, Fee Policy, and so on. The footer contains a risk warning in fine print and the legal information.

There are no names of the owners or executives. There’s no history of the broker with dates. There are no financial statements. There’s no name of the bank where the client funds are allegedly held (although they do write about “segregated accounts”). There’s no license number that can be verified.

In short, yet another cookie-cutter resource of an offshore broker. The same shortcomings are in the form of meaningless content designed to lure inexperienced traders, along with absence of the key information.

Company Contacts

When it comes to contact information, it’s simple — there’s barely any. Solantis doesn’t list a phone number, has no accounts on social media, and has no live chat for prompt communication. The company suggests writing to its email address and then waiting several days for a response. With a real, client-oriented broker, support is always a phone number + live chat on the website + email, and often messaging apps on top of that.

Key Conditions

Solantis has just two account types: Pro and ProCent. However, in practice, it’s the same account with a couple of minor differences. Let’s take a look at what’s inside and immediately break down where the catch is.

Here’s what they promise on both accounts: the MetaTrader 5 platform, an account currency of USD or EUR, instruments including forex, metals, and crypto, no commission, Market execution, floating spreads from 1.3 pips, leverage of up to 1:500, a minimum trade size of 0.01 lots, and a maximum of 500 lots. The difference between Pro and ProCent comes down only to the contract size: Pro is standard, while ProCent is a cent account meant for beginners and testing.

Solantis writes that spreads start “from 1.3 pips” and at the same time advertises “no commission”. It sounds like a deal. In reality, it’s the opposite. It all comes down to the broker’s business model. It operates as a dealing desk, meaning it acts as the counterparty for the traders. What does that mean? The company has a vested interest in client losses — its earnings come from clients’ losses. That’s why it doesn’t charge a commission, just the spread.

The broker also boasts of leverage at 1:500. However, in proper countries, the law prohibits offering this kind of leverage to retail clients. In Europe (the ESMA regulator) and Britain (the FCA), the maximum for a retail client on the major currencies is just 1:30. In Australia (ASIC), it’s 1:30 as well. This was done specifically so that people don’t blow up their deposits in five minutes flat. A leverage of 1:500 is only found at offshore outfits with no oversight. Solantis is exactly that kind of outfit. High leverage and the absence of a license is the classic combination for getting the client to lose their money faster.

Exposing Solantis

With its legal information, the broker plays it cute. In the footer of the website, it’s written tidily and honestly: “registered under number 202500785 in Saint Lucia”. So far, so normal: the company is saying it’s simply registered.

Saint Lucia

We checked the broker right there in the state registry of companies of Saint Lucia. The search results for the word Solantis returned exactly one entry: “Solantis Limited (IBC)”. What does that mean? Just one thing: the firm was indeed established and entered into the registry. And that’s all.

The most important thing is the absence of a license. The broker doesn’t list any regulation anywhere, which means there’s only the registration of the legal entity. And here’s what it all comes down to. Since the platform has no real regulator, you, as a client, have no protection whatsoever.

A quick word of context. A regulator is your insurance policy. Here’s what it offers. First: client funds are held separately, in dedicated accounts at reliable banks, and the broker can’t spend them on itself. Second: a compensation fund. If a regulated broker goes broke or turns out to be a fraud, you’ll be reimbursed for part of your money. In Britain, the FSCS fund reimburses up to £85,000, and in Cyprus, the ICF fund pays out up to €20,000. Third: where to file a complaint. If a broker rips you off, you write to the regulator, and it can punish them. Fourth: protection against going into the red, restrictions on dangerous leverage, and regular audits.

How long has Solantis been on the market, anyway? Not long at all. The company makes itself out to be an experienced broker. The homepage states that it’s “trusted by thousands of traders all over the world”. It sounds as if the firm has been operating for many years and has earned its reputation. Meanwhile, the platform’s length of time in operation isn’t listed anywhere. There’s no founding year. There’s no history. There isn’t a single date.

Domain

We checked their domain. The domain of the official solantis.pro website was registered on November 6, 2025. So, at the time of this review, the company has been “alive” for only about six months. What’s more, the domain is paid up for only one year, until November 2026 — a typical story for fly-by-night projects that have no plans of sticking around for long.

The result is plain deception. An outfit that’s six months old paints itself as a seasoned international dealer with “thousands of clients”. Where would a firm six months in age get thousands of clients all over the world? From nowhere. It’s just a pretty line on the website.

What Reviews Do Users Leave?

Another negative factor is ‌fake positive reviews. We tried to find any mentions of Solantis online, and there nearly every single comment is laudatory and positive in nature. That’s strange.

All such reviews are just text without a shred of proof that the company processes withdrawals. For instance, “Broker for everyone” or “excellent experience”. That’s a paid-for copy, not the actual experience of any traders.

Conclusions

Trading at Solantis is a one-sided game: a broker with no oversight, 1:500 leverage, and a conflict of interest. If problems arise, no compensation fund or regulator will come to your aid — they simply don’t exist. Any money you send here is money you risk never seeing again.

Pros/Cons

  • A beautifully designed official website.
  • The broker is operating illegally, as it lacks licenses from regulatory authorities.
  • It has been in business for less than a year‌ — ‌that’s not long enough.
  • Offshore registration.
  • The company stands to profit from its clients’ losses.
  • Fake positive reviews.

FAQ

Is Solantis a scam, or can I trust it?

You can't trust a company like this, and there's more than enough evidence to back up that conclusion. The company doesn't hold a broker's license — there's only a record of an offshore shell IBC firm in Saint Lucia. The website has been up and running since November 2025, meaning only about six months in total, but the outfit is already painting itself as an experienced international broker with "thousands of clients". Support consists of a single email address. The marketing pushes the easy-money angle: "income on autopilot", and "forget about market analysis". All of it is a classic set of scam indicators, not the signs of a reliable broker. The conclusion is unambiguous: it's a scam, and you shouldn't bring your money here.

Is this broker suitable for beginners in trading?

For a beginner, this is the worst possible choice — yet beginners are exactly who it's aimed at. All the advertising on the website hits squarely at those who don't yet understand a thing about the market: "income on autopilot", "forget about analysis", and "copy the pros and make money". You won't sway an experienced trader with words like these, but a beginner is easily reeled in. That's the whole calculation behind it. The problem is that a beginner doesn't have the skill to spot the traps: they won't verify the license, they won't understand that 1:500 leverage is dangerous, and they won't notice the contradictions in the documents. And it's precisely these things that are hidden here. Without a regulator and without protection, a beginner risks losing their entire deposit and getting nothing back. If you're just starting out, what you need is the complete opposite: a licensed broker, low leverage, a free demo account for practice, and proper training. Solantis doesn't offer a single one of these in its honest form. So a beginner has no business being here — this isn't a place for learning but a place where beginners are being taken for a ride.

Is it safe to provide this platform with my documents and personal information during registration?

Handing over your documents to a company like this is unsafe, and it's something to take seriously. To open an account, brokers ask for your passport or ID, proof of address, sometimes a photo holding the document, and your bank card details. That's highly sensitive information. With a licensed broker, the regulator oversees its protection, and there are strict rules for storing the data that actually work. The subject of our review has no regulator, so there'll be no one to hold accountable in the event of a leak or sale of your data. On their website, they have a page on the privacy policy and GDPR, but it's just text — without oversight, it guarantees nothing, especially considering that their other documents turned out to be copied from another broker. Your passport details in the hands of an offshore shell firm spell a risk of identity theft, of something being taken out in your name, or of your data being passed on to other scammers.
Helen Prescott

Helen, a graduate of the University of Kent with a degree in Journalism and Mass Communication, has a keen eye for uncovering financial fraud.

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Reviews: 1
  1. Pavel

    I wanted to find some real reviews of Solantis, but I couldn’t. Everywhere you look, there are paid-for fake promotional comments written by fake traders. I figured that out right away, so I made the decision to close the broker’s website and forget about it. On top of that, they have no license, no track record, and not enough transparency. It’s a scam – you can see it right away.

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